Donald Sutherland is not happy about a court decision on Canada’s election laws, and he is making it known.

Last year an Ontario Superior Court judge struck down a 1993 law that barred Canadians who have lived abroad for more than five years from casting a ballot in federal elections. But, on appeal, that decision was reversed, meaning long-term expats are once again ineligible to vote.

Sutherland worries that will include him and his wife Francine, who spend much of their time outside Canada for work.

The legendary Canadian actor, whose Hollywood career spans four decades, recently took to the pages of the Globe and Mail to air his frustration with the rule change and reaffirm his and his wife’s Canadianness.

We are Canadians. We each hold one passport. A Canadian passport. That's it. They ask me at the border why I don't take American citizenship. I could still be Canadian, they say. You could have dual citizenship. But I say no, I'm not dual anything. I'm Canadian.

Although only four paragraphs long, the post blew up online and led to a lot of follow-up coverage about the plight of expatriate voters and whether they are being disenfranchised.

But will Donald Sutherland actually lose his vote?

By his own admission, Sutherland and his wife live in the country as much as possible and even keep a residence in Canada. "Our family house is here," he wrote in his Globe opinion piece.

According to Elections Canada, any Canadian citizen over 18 and can vote in the riding where they have their "place of ordinary residence." Defining an ordinary residence is not clear-cut, but the Justice Department says on its website that it "refers to the place in which a person's lifestyle is centered and to which the person regularly returns if his or her presence is not continuous."

Even if the actor isn't in the country at the time of the election, he can still request a special ballot from Elections Canada that will let him vote by mail. Once the election is officially called (whenever that may be), anyone who meets the requirements can send in their identification and residency information to get a special ballot voting kit by mail.

So while Canadians who've been away for more than five years and don't have much of a physical connection to the country anymore will indeed lose their right to vote, it seems the Sutherlands will be just fine.

BuzzFeed Canada has reached out to Donald Sutherland's PR representative for comment but we haven't heard back yet.

Ishmael Daro is a social news editor for BuzzFeed and is based in Toronto.